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forceps

 
Dictionary: for·ceps   (fôr'səps, -sĕps) pronunciation
 
n., pl. forceps.
  1. An instrument resembling a pair of pincers or tongs, used for grasping, manipulating, or extracting, especially such an instrument used by a surgeon.
  2. A pincerlike pair of movable appendages at the posterior end of the abdomen in certain insects, such as earwigs.

[Latin, fire tongs, pincers.]


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n

1. an instrument used for grasping or applying force to teeth, tissues, or other objects. 2. an instrument used for grasping and holding tissues or specific structures. (Objectionable term in restorative dentistry because of its association with the extraction of teeth.)

 

Pl. forcipes [L.] a two-bladed instrument with a handle for compressing or grasping tissues in surgical operations, and for handling sterile dressings, etc.

  • alligator f. — strong toothed forceps having a double clamp. Long-handled with short jaws at the end of a long shank. Designed for grasping in an enclosed space, e.g. removing grass seeds from ear canals.
  • bayonet f. — a forceps whose blades are offset from the axis of the handle.
  • bone-cutting f. — have cutting blades and may be double-action.
  • bone-holding f. — designed to grip bones or fragments.
  • capsule f. — a forceps for removing the lens capsule in cataract.
  • clamp f. — a forceps-like clamp with an automatic lock, for compressing arteries, etc.
  • dressing f. — finger- and thumb-operated spring forceps used for general grasping of tissues, dressings; there is a great variety of tips available to the blades. Called also thumb forceps.
  • grasping f. — includes tissue, sponge, towel, vulsellum forceps.
  • hemostatic f. — used to clamp the ends of vessels and establish hemostasis or to cross clamp a vascular pedicle. See also crile hemostatic forceps, halsted mosquito forceps, kelly–murphy forceps, rochester–carmalt forceps.
  • obstetric f. — forceps for extracting the fetal head from the maternal passages.
  • rongeur f. — a forceps designed for use in cutting bone.
  • sponge f. — see foerster sponge forceps.
  • thumb f. — for holding tissue with the left hand while using another instrument in the right hand (or vice versa for the sinistral surgeon). Called also tissue forceps.
  • tissue f. — includes adson tissue forceps, alligator forceps (see above), allis tissue forceps, babcock forceps, knowles forceps, rightangle forceps, vulsella.
  • towel f. — spring clips with middle crossover and spring at end. Inward curving, sharp pointed tips. Used to fix drapes to tissue with minimal trauma. Also usable as light tissue forceps or rib approximators in small animals.
  • transfer f. — a sterile grasping instrument, used to move surgical instruments, blades, needles and suture material to the instrument table at surgery.
 
Wikipedia: Forceps
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Plastic forceps are intended to be disposable

Forceps are a handheld, hinged instrument used for grasping and holding objects. Forceps are used when fingers are too large to grasp small objects or when many objects need to be held at one time while the hands are used to perform a task. The term forceps is used almost exclusively within the medical field. Outside medicine, people usually refer to forceps as tweezers, tongs, pliers, clips or clamps.

The singular and plural form of forceps is always forceps, never 'forcep.' Nor is it referred to as a "pair of" as one refers to a pair of scissors. Etymologically, the word derives from the Latin 'Forca,' meaning a snare or trap.

Mechanically, forceps employ the principle of the lever to grasp and apply pressure.

Surgical forceps are commonly made of high-grade carbon steel. Lower quality steel is used in forceps made for other uses. High carbon steel ensure that the instruments can withstand repeated sterilization in high-temperature autoclaves. Some forceps, intended to be used once and then discarded, are made of plastic.

There are two basic types of forceps: non-locking (often called 'thumb forceps' or 'Pick-ups') and locking, though these two types come in dozens of specialized forms for various uses. Non-locking forceps also come in two basic forms, hinged at one end, away from the grasping end (colloquially such forceps are called tweezers, though a medical professional would not likely refer to them as such) and hinged in the middle, rather like scissors (though, unlike scissors, forceps meet on flat, grasping surfaces rather than in interposing blades). Locking forceps are almost always hinged in the middle, though some forms place the hinge very close to the grasping end. Locking forceps use various means to lock the grasping surfaces in a closed position to facilitate manipulation or to independently clamp, grasp or hold an object.

Contents

Thumb forceps

Thumb forceps are commonly held between the thumb and two or three fingers of one hand, with the top end resting on the anatomical snuff box at the base of the thumb and index finger. Spring tension at one end holds the grasping ends apart until pressure is applied. This allows one to quickly and easily grasp small objects or tissue to move and release it or to grasp and hold tissue with easily variable pressure. Thumb forceps are used to hold tissue in place when applying sutures, to gently move tissues out of the way during exploratory surgery and to move dressings or draping without using the hands or fingers.

Thumb forceps can have smooth tips, cross-hatched tips or serrated tips (often called 'mouse's teeth'). Common arrangements of teeth are 1x2 (two teeth on one side meshing with a single tooth on the other), 7x7 and 9x9. Serrated forceps are used on tissue; counter-intuitively, teeth will damage tissue less than a smooth surface (you can grasp with less overall pressure). Smooth or cross-hatched forceps are used to move dressings, remove sutures and similar tasks.

Adson tissue forceps

Note the 1x2 "mouse's teeth" on the lower tip.

Image:Adson forceps.svg

Locking forceps

Locking forceps, sometimes called clamps, are used to grasp and hold objects or tissue. When they are used to compress an artery to forestall bleeding they are called hemostats. Another form of locking forceps is the needle holder, used to guide a suturing needle through tissue. Many locking forceps use finger loops to facilitate handling (see illustration, below, of Kelly Forceps). The finger loops are usually grasped by the thumb and middle or ring fingers, while the index finger helps guide the instrument.

The most common locking mechanism is a series of interlocking teeth located near the finger loops. As the forceps are closed, the teeth engage and keep the instrument's grasping surfaces from separating. A simple shift of the fingers is all that is needed to dis-engage the teeth and allow the grasping ends to move apart. Forceps are also used for surgery.

Kelly forceps

Kelly forceps, shown closed and open

Kelly forceps (also known as Mosquito or Rochester forceps) are a type of hemostat usually made of stainless steel. They resemble a pair of scissors with the blade replaced by a blunted grip. They also feature a locking mechanism to allow them to act as clamps. Kelly hemostats are distinguished from the crile variety, in part, by their cross-hatched grip pattern, as opposed to a simple system of grooves. Kelly forceps may be floor grade (regular use) and as such not used for surgery. It may also be sterilized and used in operations, in both human and veterinary medicine. They may be either curved or straight. In surgery, they may be used for holding off blood vessels or [tissues], as general purpose clamps, or for assorted other purposes. The name comes from its original manufacturer. The "Mosquito" variant of the tool is more delicate and have smaller, finer tips. A similar tool is the Carmalt, which is heavier and longer.

Medical forceps

Here are few categories that are commonly used:

  • Anesthesia Forceps
  • Artery Forceps
  • Atraumatic Forceps
  • Biopsy Forceps
  • Bone Cutting Forceps
  • Bone-Holding Forceps
  • Catheter Forceps
  • Cilia Forceps
  • Curettes Forceps
  • Cushing Forceps
  • Dermal Forceps & Nippers
  • Dressing Forceps
  • Ear Forceps
  • Eye Forceps
  • Gall Bladder Forceps
  • Hemostatic Forceps
  • Hysterectomy Forceps
  • Intestinal Forceps
  • Micro Surgery Forceps
  • Nasal Forceps
  • Obstetrical Forceps
  • Post Mortem Forceps
  • Splinter Forceps
  • Sponge Forceps
  • Sterilizer Forceps
  • Suture Sundries Forceps
  • Tenaculum Forceps
  • Thoracic Forceps
  • Thoracic Surgical Forceps
  • Thumb Forceps
  • Tissue Forceps
  • Tongue Forceps
  • Tooth Extracting Forceps
  • Tubing Forceps
  • Uterine Forceps
  • Vusellum Forceps
  • Wire Cutting Forceps

Forceps in childbirth

Forceps can be used to assist the delivery of a baby as an alternative to the ventouse method. See forceps in childbirth.


 
Translations: Forceps
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Dansk (Danish)
n. - pincet, tang

Nederlands (Dutch)
tang, lichaamsdeel dat op tang lijkt

Français (French)
n. - (Méd) pince, (Méd) fers, forceps, (Dent) davier

Deutsch (German)
n. - Zange

Ελληνική (Greek)
n. pl. - λαβίδα, δαγκάνα εντόμου

Italiano (Italian)
forcipe

Português (Portuguese)
n. pl. - fórceps (m pl) (Med.)

Русский (Russian)
хирургические щипцы, форцепс

Español (Spanish)
n. - fórceps

Svenska (Swedish)
n. pl. - pincett, tånglikt organ (biol.)

中文(简体)(Chinese (Simplified))
镊子, 钳子状器官, 钳子

中文(繁體)(Chinese (Traditional))
n. pl. - 鑷子, 鉗子狀器官, 鉗子
n. - 鑷子, 鉗子狀器官, 鉗子

한국어 (Korean)
n. pl. - 핀셋, 족집게
n. - 집게

日本語 (Japanese)
n. - ピンセット, 鉗子

العربيه (Arabic)
‏(الجمع) كلاب الجراح , ملقط‏

עברית (Hebrew)
n. pl. - ‮מלקחיים, מצבתיים (אצל סרטן)‬
n. - ‮מלקחיים‬


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2007. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
Dental Dictionary. Mosby's Dental Dictionary. Copyright © 2004 by Elsevier, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Veterinary Dictionary. Saunders Comprehensive Veterinary Dictionary 3rd Edition. Copyright © 2007 by D.C. Blood, V.P. Studdert and C.C. Gay, Elsevier. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Forceps" Read more
Translations. Copyright © 2007, WizCom Technologies Ltd. All rights reserved.  Read more